The evening world. Newspaper, October 20, 1908, Page 15

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, October 20, OOOO eC oO) PERO OY OOOO OULD EE SOOO UO UO UOMO Ue UC rman wns APO ADAND NOD HATO OOOEVOOOM The Lazy, Careless: Girl Not a Desirable Gues DITBAOOOETOOOD ates By Lilian Bell. lear trouble and expense on her part ought to be recogmized by guests? No, HIS {# the} she never thinks at all, Ap seneon Of! 1 know a woman who taught sich a the year) girl a much needed lesson—a lesson that when girls visit. | her mother was much to blame for not And every hostess | having taught her first. knows (iat there | The girl telephoned Just bofore dinner is as much differ- |on two days in succession that she had ence between the | been asked to. stay’ to dinner with a girl who haa been | friend and wouldn't be home. She was taught by a@ care- | visiting In a house where, to ha ul mother to be | guest staying In the house meant that considerate andjench member of th family must do the girl whose) without some comfort and oll must mother permits her | help. to be nelther mora | My friend sald nothing, but the next nor less than alday tt happened to pour rain and was selfish sponge on!the servant's day out. So the whole ot her people's |famtly went out to an aunt's (0 dinner, hospitality os there is between dark- | leaving a note for the girl visitor which boy ot The Newlyweds-:- Their Baby @t jeor-e McManus: WELL, DOVEY, THE HOUSE (5 THOROUGHLY CLEAN NOW ! ‘Bernstein's “Samzon’ Not Half So Sirorg “The Thief.” BY CHARLES DARNTON. Market quotations on Henri Bornstein's value as a playwright are not ‘way Below par today that young gentieman may nk his lusky star—not Mr William Gillette, if you please. Quite between ourselves Mr. Rernsiein has |no occasion to keep the cable hot with heartfelt thanks to Mr, Gillette for what je did at the Criterion Theatre last night. At the same time It would be unfair to put the whole Iurden of “Samson” lon Mr. Gillette's suspiciously bre shoulders, for the play is not half so strong jas “The Thief,” and much weaker than another French adaptation, “Business Is Business," in which Mr. William H. Crane failed at the same house a few |yeara ago. If it had beon written by an unknown Ameriean and Its chlef charac+ lter played by @ star without a stripe it would have been damned as melodrama lat the end of the third act, when the man who had bought his wife berated the \tover who had taken her at the price of a midnight supper, with the o! st abuse at the command of the French or English tongue. Liar," “thief,” “dirty dog,” “convict'—t ; Ve vust yea CLEANIN' mY DESK! Ln a ] i 1 ; 1 | | } | | | | ese are a few of the cholve words husband and the r in the scene that measured the “strength” of “Samson,” You walt- ed for the advertised “drama” and you got vulgar abuse. You watchea tor act- ing and you saw Mr, Gillette chewing the cud of discontent gs though it were gum or tobacco, To beyin with you had a hero risen from the docks to financial power who we and daylight | raid: COME HERE QUICH, LOVEY, Take, for example, the git! whose] “Dear Maud—As we never know when mother walts on her hand and foot, | You will be with us atdinner, we venture who lets her sleep late even though | to think that to-day ft will happen as ft she has to get breakfast for the lazy |did Tuesday and Wednesday, and you wir) with her own hands, who mendsj Will remain away after a dinner has and cleans up after her in every way. | been prepared for you. If, however, you It ts such a girl who is always late to| Should be at home you will find all you breakfast and keeps the table from be-| Need in the ice box. Helma ts out, so BABY'S BEEN PLAYING SNOW STorM ! nared until, the middle of the |Help yourself and make yourself as thor- oughly at home as you have heretofore, v will return early in the evening.” Now, instead of that girl being @ 4 sport and playing the game, she was Tt Is such a girl who Hnes the bath- rriouy and arraigned my friend in no room floor with towels when she takes (uncertain terms for her “inhospitality.” a ath and leaves the room in such @ My friend led her to her room with @ ing morning. This upsets the work all over the house where only one or two maids are kept, had bought his wife at the highest mar- ket price from parents who had heon only too willing to sell her, and th you raw her playing herself into the Worthless hands of a younger man whose fortune was founded on the aus- band’s generosity. The answer to the state of disorder that it takes half an/ fen hand and in toner which held no childish plot was as simple as A BC hour to clear up after her. tremble in them she said a few things moral You co butld your blocks Tt is such a girl who uses fresh towel® | (o that girl which made her ears tingle, ist killed time and whe the dram interest. Nothing worthy of Bernstein happened until Anne-Mar tottered Into the sec- ond act, her hair at half-mast, her lace | gown torn d her arm brulsed--beautt- ful symbols of her first night of “lb- Her husband was at home tn- of in London, as st ad sup- nd it was 2 o'clock {: e morn- 1 she was his wif e was er husban and he w ed to know she had to clean her shoes or dust a hat, even) you think she did wrong? Well, if when she must know that every extra the mothers of this world fail to train piece put in the family wash counts. their children to be decently considerate It Is such a girl who makes plans of the comfort of others, they must without consulting her hostess. She re- expect strangers to carry on the good mains away from dinner with only a work telephone message at the last moment.! And sometimes strangers in expret Does the selfish girl ever stop to think ing their opinion of such girls as I have that most hostesses get up extra ments deserihed do not take "feelings" into when they have mpany, and that / consideration. WHarmeny. CONSTANCE COLLIER B80 MARIE The wife's story didn't ters In the eyes of those who look for better things in the t had gone to a resta @he had made her escape while the Ights were out and th Joyous party were sprawling about the place. In hold Mr, Gillette, as Maurice Brachard, a ‘Iongsb king,” made some show of 5 overworked th Govain a members of man to account, n who had become e ‘c “to Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courtship and ‘Marriage T "0" nis face, even here, ulders, for his twitching " 3 Ken his case covers the of obvious acting. faith in you Sf you tell her falsehoods. loves me or not, end do vou think she and I love her so that I do not KNOW oo te the most Mr. Giltette’s nervous excuse for a powerful will was expecially apparent in He Deceived Her. You have treated your fiancee very badly is too old for me, considering her ae to do, as at present I only male) ran his scene at the tele ne, where he advised his business agent that he had not Dene Betty and you can win her back only if you. wealth? S.C. ($12 per week, and she says she will not desiral lef town and instructed hii rt at Ing with a girt for the can convince her that you sincerely re- You are entirely too young to think get married on jess than $25 per week. small children, and to have his ‘hour. Govain walked into the trap, neheon kept him there ur dottom fell out of the market. Mearwatle B: Portunity to discover vast year, We were engaged, but last’ gret having deceived her, Apologize to of marrying, and especially for money. { have tried very hard to get a better this model is told me she did not want her and ask to be n, and if she A boy of your age should prefer to|place, but have been unsuccessful. 10 more, bgcause Sunday I) does overlook the lie stick to veracity work for his own money rather than) you think J should give her up? I love went out to a ball game with two other jn the future, to depand upon a woman for his sup-| her go that it would break my heart if; !& yet perfectly Hotel Ritz at 11 o'clock. He was | HAVE been the co; pretty and becor ge of at his guest's stick mg din area HN . 5 end hought she would irty-eight Is en- 2 her his wife. simple withal. In for nothing more than a Gillette trict girl friends of m 1 thought she w port. A woman of thirty-elg: |some one should make her his w! urneniiThauaarral comelcromitnata (cre vt find it out, as {told her t was sick ZO Marry for Money. tlrely too old for you and ehe tn all) Ce elit Nemiiiusteation’ tlt aHatithelmariet peanittarisvenaithe on Sunday. Some mutual friends saw Dear Betty: probability considers you a child | ‘Tell the young lady of your love and . but I did not know it, and told her 7 AM a young men twenty years old Jask her if she will walt unt you are !# made of brond- Pca HU saa ace nde rie ang sgut ine. amibrowenthearten overlie |il| and’ dasice (to; mars (e| etl cau | dO noon touMann, jfivsa position to marry. If he Teaily cloth tu one of the Pe ara Ret Goodie eaten Will you kindly tell me what to do to | either has some money or will In- Dear Petty |HOVas RGU aTion wiliewe is) cahe Mrolush’ (new pieladojeik a TeUariite cracttine ave eee win her back, as I know I did not treat herit some. j am acquainted with a| [AM twenty-two and am in love with {0 do so you tan, Onis come er M8 ge aes trimmed tion of the fact that he was a rulned nenirignt? C. CC. |lady about thirty-eight who has a good| | a young lady of twenty-one. This’ tention to other «iris and, becoming. In-| with black atti : ect any girl to have! income, How can I tell whether sh rl has everything she wishes for terested In your work and bool brad, but all sae All the time Mr. Arthur Byron, who HOO Cont Ones Cay GN GO Ines: aan i CON Can ne Li — sonable cloaking = = materials are ap- a) } WHAT REALLY 2 | d er | propriate. White Romantic Rhoda ! _- HAPPENED) TO HER By Ethel Lloyd Patt SOM penitts: fined with a scalloped edge {8 dainty and charming, and the darker broadcloths and the plain cheviots and the mixtures are a mirable for hard The quantity of material required for the medium size (6 years) Is $34 yards 27, 21-2 yards 44 or 2 yards Inches wide with 4% yards of braid. Played Govain with American confi- dence in himself, looked as though it would be the easiest matter in the world for him to throw Mr. Gillette through the window. The author and Mr. Frohman had not worked hand in hand. Where one had called for strength the other had supplied a ner. vous actor who falled to suggest the power that was needed There was nothing in the final act to help matters. it merely straightened out Into conventional form, with the wife willing to face the world husband who had ruined } well as her lover. Mr. Frohman might have rend wether’ and hit upon stronger mat for a play than Samso pro: Perhaps the Bernstein melodrama was weakened by adaptation, and certain! it has heen Americanized almost to the Umit of provincialism. 1 ith the self as WIAIAM GILLETTE 83 MAURICE ARTHUR BYRON &@3 GOVAIH 1s cut In sizes for here surely is any children of 2, 4 6 Bo necessity for Gillette's frequent 4 and 8 years of age. Child’s Coat—Pattern No. 6107, use of “Yoa-ah.” The fact that Prachard's w mes out of her restaurant adventur> badly damaged but still !n the moral rine doesn’t atone for other sins 6 Tala BN Reo R OS WALL DEAL BARR SEER ERG E. CREP ERAN RAT ORCL T OC TD Of the adapte iply great Lezinskie liked on her to look, How Call or wend by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- Miss Constance Collier, an Engl @ utterly without cha OMANTIC RHODA'S efforts tu isopressed mucn with the air of her, He thought that she was Obtain a job more zealous A wholesale manufacturer Until next morn; sad to relate, But he liked more his pi roll book; TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 18? Bast Twenty-third street, New every chance to score e wife. Her words went to the roof of grew, Of fluffy muffs With tralling frills And so—alas! Obtain $ York Send 10 centy in coin of stamps for each pattern ordered. her mouth and she lef ng to her eyebrows. The surprise 1 Until at last, And lacy ruffs And yard-long quills, It came to pass | $ mmese IMPORTANT—Write your name and addrvar plalaly, snd a evening was furnished py Miss Pauline Frederick, who as the cast-off toy of Her troubles past, Agrced her salary to incur. She sauntered in four hours late. On Saturday she got “the hook.” Patterns, { ways vpecify slze wanted. Anne-Marie's lover opened Brachara’s eyes and kept him from going to London. ‘Employment crowned an Interview 2 9.4:060089906055000000000008 OO4* i0600000000000008 PDD 994096600 O0OOOO0O99900900000* $006-06-080-00000:09000000-000:0800000. 299999999999 49944964 $:6:0025900000030000000 £44-66000004000090000006-02000001000008000000O0000 y ie We f ie By Robert W. Chamb Rew pcreen THE YOUNGER SET» wigan LODLEDLP®HLDI.GID 2-99ODOL 09 99OOGODDHH-DI.GIEDIDPHVOHGGOPDHHDF-DDD HOHLHHLHHHHHHHHOVDGHEOODHOFHG HFG 090009 FF DODD 9G DV0HGIDHDGLHYH 049 H909H9HD09400 0400 (Copyright, 1907, by Robert W. Chambers); “Oh! Then ours is to be a lifelong; “What chances?” could not Interpret. She looked up as{"'I was fool enough to belleve tn 1 pi and anti-sehtimental contract!" | “The—the consideration; you don't cal! he approached and stretched out her self; that SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS INSTALM “Yes, unlees you marry.” other woman ‘child,’ do you? You har hess and sweetness and loyalty to her,!not wholy agreeable, wes teaching him |of the sea tan, And it appeared that 1. I have always been on I am not a woman; I was a fool to say the elements of consideration for others; he was really tired, for he seemed in- the edge of loving you. Only In dreams so. But you—you are so overwhelm- he was less impulsive, more tolerant, clined to lounge on the veranda, satis- i; si New ¥ “I promise not to," he said, “unless 't constantly remind other women of Forgive me, Capt. Selwyn," she sald. aid I ever dare set foot across that ingly a man that !f !t were in me to yet, at times, Selwyn and Eileen also fled as long as Selwyn remained 11 ORe NDI Bele yp, oF sn Hla NON Tene ae 74 difference !n your ages, do you?|"I am a chill—a spoiled one; and Ij frontier, Now I have dared. I love, love—in that way—tt would be you! Hoticed that he became very res sight. But when Selwyn moved he got Gomily, Dae seslened from i to marry aack| ‘I pK¢mise not to,” she enld gayly, on't feel with other women’ that | have proved it to you, Will you alt here you, ‘That ts all; and it must not ¢ ¢ © Do you understand me? Or have toward the end of hi visit at Bilver- up and followed. der. Returaing to “unless sou do." ou areas you please to call 1t—hors| beside me and tell me very gently What | tress you," |1 lost a friend. Wil you forgive my side; as though something in the city So subdued, go listless, so gentle 4a freau #88) phere remat he observed, “but concours—out of the running, And|a fool Tam to risk straining the friend-) 445 1) aes not, she sald, “I have! f00l!sh boast? Can you still keep me ‘ted him—some duty, or responsi- | manner and speech had he become that Erroi, to one way for you and I ever to marry somehc with 1 {t humillates. Be- chip dearest to me tn the whole world? 2 dearly, ¢ ¢ ¢ first in your heart—as you are in mine? ll not entirely pleasant. pbody, In his temporary absence, ; | always loved you~dear! anybody. And as I'm hors concours, cause even !f I-if I am the sort of a) And will you fix my penance? Not in that way, © ® ® I don't know! AM@ pardon In all that 1 4? ‘There was, too, something of sober- Wondercd whe the boy was per- even that hope ts ended.” girl who never means to marry, you You have fixed it yourself,” he said. ty te cata arial dit eciaitiva tara Can you do these things because I ask ness, amounting at momenta to ais- | fectly well—which voiced the general 4 4 tttud ems to y the| “How?! | Bs ? B82 DER oe! you contented listlessness—not solitary “doubt hitherto unex ¢ Sho flushed; her ips parted, but sho YOUr attitude) seems to take away the!’ , Capt. Selwyn? Can we not go on tn the) > as Prana that fala In love with him.” One evening checked what she had meant to say, Possibility of my changing my mind; tt) "By the challenge of your woman- | (apt Balen) Nee Re por] exes he sald brooding; for at such momenta he| But Austin laughed and said that the Jeune ‘“enenes, tier husband, fen! and they walked forward together in |dictates to me, giving mo no choles, nojhonde |, |nave—almost spoiled? Must we he like stuck following bin about (Rey wea merely finding timalti. ane threatens Alixe Into Iberty, no personal freedom in the mat- did not challenge"— t p : * rer ining rathal o him, an | everybody acquiesced, much relleved at Wyne business partner, Neo up her mind wh: say and how to . 0 eu eonmlde | ere | 1 Aer Onniaaee ea Liana | is hough the elde sence | the expla i to Belyyn. Fea] estate deal no questionat npn it ed me somehow uiterly out of the, The girl I cared for—the girl who was Al! to commonplace * Ua AP A Novice. Seeata fant (anteaventiatnmtection explanation was not at all satisfactory, faviens rom, the Grn. peeraprd tlon—radically unthinkable as a wo- |there with me on Brier Water—so many, | me; I do love you; Jt 1s perfe eary There was trouble somewhere, oem p Pid eatte ica think a we ‘Capt. Selwyn, there are two things SRALD came to Silverside two or At such intervals Selwyn longed to dissipation becomes notorious 7 - Siaeaminert o take for grant-|mMany centuries ago- 1 who, ands a F 1 ain NE PORE arene LACE) At MUR IDtAY Ale Gee BATAnUni Warashune aha onne oon ‘sacrifice of part, of his own for: that you do which seem to me unfair, ™ON And you assum AGNARRLG EA PARIN | Maa ar eal nanainesiataae ian iva Si ASTRA OTT three t uring the early sum- invite the boy's confidence, knowing | Of (oun: niente Parrett Se. tte Se ins trie, cane ane: | Fou still have, at times, that faraway, /@4 that 1 piso regard you as—ae hora) (or nee ne eae m memory.” | acc litte things—in 1 ye ee ee to ctae Kraak | Hat ne Dadisame phase of life touface | Oona a ie, day in Sep- San ee TOT A HOOT, Re Yate Te sated: | aby , Jon which exel concours, * * * Those are my griov-|tHe § &: rg ‘A i " ; 1 remaining until the following Mon-) sor which his expe a Kea tavidantc| nexper i ‘country eat Sliverside. He Is experl- absent expression which excludes ine 4 ara ala What do you mean?” she asked with y Ite I we se ental" 5 tember he wrote G: cf iim to Foamting with a new expionive, by, umeh Mt and when I venturo to break the silence, ances Capiain Selwyn, CO ret Sac aod Gd would cael wan? Pheny |oaeL moras Inadequate, But Gerald gaye no aign | ember he wrote Gerald, aeiding | feo much of each ‘aiher. Ther talk one| you have a way of answering, ‘Yos, don't rexard you so, And Tmand it)falntly. your first name, T suppose, But I can't;; 4!! his youthful admiration and "lof invitation) and Selwyn dared not| Ppa Hugorion bawn and come Gay verges dangerously on the sentimental. | ona,’ and ‘No, child’ though you |tenbies me to be exeluded=to be found) (18), oy Tiva tricd to-—and sia very, very hard Pp Selwyn had returned—that Was speak leat he undo what time and his | (> Peay reentry, one ie | were inattentive and I had not yet be- “@nting. inadequate in anyth ing that a| feet aor selucnanariietis taillanniinaseateuee 5 s It ds an Plainly evident—and with it something | ostearanee were slowly r SPA a acer CHAPTER Vu. leome an adult, That {s my first com- Woman should be. J know that you and on Hany 1 ‘ “inn jess of callow gelf-sufticiency, He did fe oie remained during | sax f id plaint! © * * What are you laughing 1 have no desire to marry each other~ | ¥ou? 4 an 1 40 he a8 Cooksaure of him: 5 i if lhe 5 Young Lawn came by the t train: (Continued.) at? It {s truo; and {t confuses and hurts Dbut—but please don't make the reason Nen " Ah elf and the world ga he had been; | ‘oe early summer; and everybody sup ald wired that he would g the a for {t either your age or my physieal| “Have you any idea what I am going ! ¢ In'ti-you. so}inore wan sumptiousnesa about) Posed that Gerald's two weeks’ vaci- ating Gonrnl ia Silverside. me; because I know I am intelligent {0 either your ag my physica bs there wa y ’ ; Se AAS OR wing Mm i ™ < enough and old enough to—to be t immat or intellectual inexperi- | to say y strong and generous |)im, tess aggressive complacency. | on would be spen sore Silvers He did arrive, unusually pallid, almost HOP was smiling and her eyes were'aw a woman!~a woman attractive ence.” She looked up quickly, frightened at and clever a pertect= Somewhere and aoinehow somebody or | Abparentiy the boy himself thought #0, | yaygard; and Selwyn, who met him at clear and fearless, but there was a/ enough to be reckoned with! But I, Another of those weather-stained | te 'remor In ¥DICG, a ever f a ething had come collision with | t9%, for he made seme pl Le the station and drove him over from Don't—don't say it, Capt, Selwyn I love dear t th nd Anstin sent down a yery handsome | wy t, ventured at last to give the wild-rose tint on her cheeks which! never seem to be wholly so to you.” ‘seats of Georgia marble stood em Dan oikaad dhe Sea: Baley f | a dea » but wh what this hed been |and Austin sent down a very rave! nt a jeepened a iittle as he turned short tn augh died ou ded; for | bedded under the trees near where she I yau Usten= noe you saw! 1 could 1 Dg My> he did not offer to confide In Selwyn; new motor boat for hi hoy a chans onpan a traight at her The laugh died out as bherpleay Gi fon) BS A halted 4 she ee: any! ‘Ino, I cannot f to to) e 7 r 1 and the older man, dreading to disturb Then, at the last minute, @ telegram put Gerald remained utterly unrespone his tracke, gazing straig’ a moment they stood there, confronting had halted; and she seated herself, ou 1 yl fraid hi “ry ins ° 7 tig (haiti a aa tieett a ae A eae an eaetiee “You wish to keep me~for yourself?” a6 another w ly composed, and inwardly a little He said quiet was afraid you jy) miisohs Aud ne 1 existing @& 1 between them, for- arrived saying that he had sailed for | sive, stolidly ao, and the oth he repeated, laughing. ce frightened at what she had suid. could not listen, You see, en, that, ne; Isthere (mes when it }y > que 1 or fnyite, even ine Newport on Neergard’s big yacht! And | relinquished the hope of any confidence “Yes, Capt. Selwyn.” “Do you imaging.” ho said in o low | “As for Selwyn, he remained where he after all, a man does know when he is vould be unendurable-f could not us ectly, any Ailence not offered, two wooks word was received at that time, shifting the conversation “Until y ry. h | voles, "that t Gp not know all shat 2 e n > lawn done for 5 or suffer aa ca: Selwyn ha become conselous n him at Stiverside at once to the object and reason of Ger- "Until you marry. Is that It, Eh had been sfanding on the lawn's velvet ¥ WN : ; 0 ; i ‘ rae ag leon?” “I don't know whether jou do, For eago; and, ralsing ber eyes again, her Cap 3 turned and , , hang In the boy's ate in Augast, however, he wrote «| aid's coming, and gayly expre: “Yes, until I a all your friendship--for all your Itking heart misgave her that she had wan- | caught ! ' la er t ers there seemed rather color e to Selwyn, sa belief that the time wee Vary ad “And then we'll let each other go; ts and your kindneas to me—somehow—I- | toniy strained a friendship which had|eyes > ‘ * ns wirarte \ ‘ ich ta! ing that he Mired and would bo/ hand when Chaoslte would Agure heey ine” I don't seem to 4 with you ae oth been all but perfect; and now he was, penaliy for what | sald? Did you taink 1 ’ y or the A re of ponsi- rthe s ily in the world’s list of commercially es, | NM n tt bl losiv “Hos, @ul t Mhink 1 iid ou ihas $|wemen do; 5 don't seem to etend thei! moving acrase the path toward her— fi invited this"—— oving ty bring to more thought- | He came, thinner than usual, with | valuable explosives. Y amald, peneh mares, Diaa's iw ‘chances’ © curious look im bis face which she’ ‘“Anviled! No, child” ne said genuy. naible of your good- lee, Biuiniy enough some experience, cic °it) pallor showing through trace (To Be Continue? j ry a

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